Tag: Seadas

  • Antonietta Cuozzo – fresh food producer

    Map reference

    Photo gallery

    We went to visit the combined kitchen and fresh pasta shop of Antonietta Cuozzo and her son Carlo Cherchi at 87, via Figoli in Oristano. Antonietta founded this enterprise in 1971 and she has expanded her firm gradually being aided by her son and some employees.

    Having entered the shop, we were surprised by the sight of lots of delicious pastries because we didn’t know that Antonietta was making anything else than fresh pasta, as shown on the exterior of her shop. Anyway, inside the shop we were tempted by the sight of delicious, hand-made sweets like seadas, various pies, ciambelle and papassini using high-quality ingredients.

    However, the product which was most intriguing was the Sardinian roasted fregola, a typical Sardinian pasta made from semolina, water and salt, all which is reduced to tiny spheres, which are roasted in an oven.

    It really looks like the famous couscous probably due to cultural exchanges between Sardinia and the peoples of North Africa, a not surprising supposition given the exchanges between the peoples of the Mediterranean for millennia.

    Fregola is often served in fish or meat soups, but also with risotto and sheep’s cheese or more traditionally with various types of molluscs like clams and mussels.

    This firm also occupies itself with making various tasty dishes ready to be taken away like baked pasta, polenta, ravioli with ham, cannelloni, etc.

    During our visit, some of the coworkers were preparing parmigiana di melanzane, salad pies with cheese and vegetables and meat sauce for seasoning ravioli with meat, the specialty of this firm.

    When we were thanking Antonietta, she kindly gave us some bags of fregola, which we appreciated highly. This was a pleasant and interesting visit and Antonietta and her son willingly answered all our questions.

  • Rossella Pais confectionery

    rosella_pais_w500

    Web site

    Map reference

    Photo gallery

    The confectionery of Rossella Pais is a small, traditional and family-driven business.

    Due to the foresight and hard work of Rossella Pais, her small confectionery has been promoted to “Comunità del cibo”, which is the first step on the way to being recognised as a presidium. She has succeeded in resurrecting an ancient tradition among the families of Usini, meaning the making of “Andarinos”, a type of pastry with a helical shape which was prepared for consumption at religious festivals and ceremonies. The name Andarinos means a (baby) walker (a mechanical device where toddlers could make their first steps without tiring their legs and in which they could move around safely remaining in a protective structure).

    Andarinos has been described in documents dating from the Spanish rule of Sardinia (the 1300s/1400s), but they are surely even older. There is no mention of Andarinos anywhere else in Sardinia, meaning that they have only been produced in Usini.

    Andarinos have a helical shape with a pattern of lines on the surface. These characteristics are the results of operations requiring a high level of manual dexterity together with a meticulous care as regards cutting up the correct amount of dough for making an Andarino.

    Quick, secure and light motions executed in rapid succession seems to anticipate the rituals of the feasts and ceremonies to follow the making of these pastries when invited guests will be able to snack these delicacies.

    After having mixed and kneaded bran of durum wheat with water and together with some salt until the paste is homogeneous, small pieces of pastry are cut off, which again are cut into even smaller pieces shaped like a short pencil. Then, the confectioner rolls every piece deftly with her thumb on a piece of glass, in which a pattern has already been carved, until it has a helical shape together with a line pattern due to the pattern on the glass plate. Then, the pastries are allowed to dry in the sun, weather permitting, in special, handmade baskets.

    In fact, the confectionery of Rosella Pais have reintroduced this typical product to Usini, perpetuating a tradition passed on from generation to generation.

    Other types of pastries made at this confectionery include Panadas (circular shape filled with pork together with garlic, salt, parsley and pepper), and a large variety of typical Sardinian pastries like Culurgiones, Ciccioneddos, Tazzolas, Filindeu, Seadas and so on.

    Rosella Pais can be contacted here and here.